A Little Girl Pushed Her Twin Into a Police Station at Midnight-xurixuri

Rain had been falling over the State of Mexico for so long that night that the police station windows looked almost black.

Every few seconds, the wind drove another sheet of water against the glass, and the lobby lights flickered across the wet floor like a warning.

Officer Ramírez was on the late shift, the kind of shift where the whole building seemed to breathe slower.

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The coffee in the corner pot had burned down to something bitter, the metal filing cabinets held the cold, and the incident log in front of him had only one fresh entry.

11:47 p.m.

Routine patrol check.

Nothing about the next minute would be routine.

The front door burst open so violently that the glass rattled in the frame.

Ramírez looked up expecting an angry man, a drunk driver, a bleeding teenager, maybe a neighbor dispute dragged in from the rain.

Instead, he saw a little girl.

She could not have been more than five.

Her hair was soaked flat to her cheeks, her thin dress clung to her arms, and her bare legs trembled so badly that for a second he thought she might fall before she reached the desk.

But she did not fall.

Both of her hands were wrapped around the handle of a rusty shopping cart.

She was pushing it with the stubborn, silent force of a child who had already decided there was no one else coming.

Ramírez stood.

That was when he saw the second child inside the cart.

Another little girl lay curled on her side beneath the wet fabric of her dress.

Same face.

Same dark hair.

Same small hands.

Her twin.

The second child’s eyes were half-open but not focused, and her breathing came in shallow pulls that made Ramírez feel the muscles in his neck tighten.

Her stomach was swollen beneath the stretched cloth, not in the ordinary way a child’s stomach looks after too much food or too much sleep.

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